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The Caravan for Peace Begins a Long Ride Across the USA
By Fred Rosen
North American Congress on Latin America - NACLA
August 20, 2012
http://www.nacla.org/blog/2012/8/20/caravan-peace-begins-long-ride-across-usa
On August 12th, with activist-poet Javier Sicilia providing
the leadership, the inspiration, and the poetry, the anti-
Drug War, anti-militarization Caravan for Peace With Justice
and Dignity kicked off its one-month, 6,000-mile journey
across the United States.
Riding from San Diego to Washington, D.C., the Caravan seeks
to educate and confront Americans about the terrible
violence besetting Mexico - and perhaps to recruit those who
are convinced and inspired to a U.S. offshoot of Mexico's
Movement for Peace. The journey will take the group,
composed of Mexican and U.S. citizens, with a sizable
contingent of relatives of the murdered and disappeared,
along the entire U.S. border with Mexico, and further east
to Atlanta and nearby Fort Benning. Readers will remember
Fort Benning as the home of the infamous School of the
Americas, training ground of Latin American dictatorships -
and of some of most brutal tyrants of the last century.
From Atlanta, the Caravan will turn north, reaching Chicago
- destination of a large number of Mexican immigrants - on
the evening of September 2, where it will stay until the
4th. It will then head to New York for two days of meetings
and demonstrations (September 6 and 7) and finally to
Washington, D.C. for a closing demonstration/ceremony and
press conference on September 12. All told, the Caravan will
have stopover points in 27 U.S. cities.
Led by Sicilia, who was presented with NACLA's La Lucha
Sigue Award last May, the Caravan seeks to raise U.S.
awareness of the human toll the increasingly violent Drug
War is taking in Mexico - with somewhere near 70,000 deaths
and countless kidnappings, disappearances, and acts of
extortion over the past six years. In pursuit of that
awareness, the Caravan wants to highlight the many ways the
United States (public institutions and private actors alike)
aids and abets the Mexican horror: promotion of, and aid for
the militarized Drug War; the ease of access to the cross-
border arms trade; the widespread practice of money
laundering; and the enormous U.S. demand for illicit drugs.
The Caravan has been raising the issue of the "inhumane"
U.S. immigration policy as well. It explicitly wants to
place these questions on the political agenda during the
run-up to the U.S. elections, when people are presumably
paying attention to politics and policy.
Sicilia is the founder of the Movement for Peace With
Justice and Dignity, and the principal spokesperson for the
Caravan's agenda. His public talks reflect a fairly
sophisticated knowledge of his audience, taking his text
from such diverse Americans as Benjamin Franklin ("there
never was a good war or a bad peace") and Tom Paine ("only
an army of principles can penetrate where an army of
soldiers cannot"), to Ezra Pound ("...with usura, sin
against nature/ is thy bread ever more of stale rags/ is thy
bread dry as paper....") and Bob Dylan ("sometimes my burden
seems more than I can bear/ it's not dark yet, but it's
getting there"). No Padre Hidalgo or Pancho Villa here.
The use of Pound may seem a little out of place in this
movement, but here's how Sicilia brings it home: "Because of
usury - this immense search of profit at any cost - the
usury of this war against drugs, of guns, of those banks and
their money laundering, this usury coming from the United
States, that has encysted in Mexico and spreads out like
gangrene throughout the American continent and the world,
that has overwhelmed us with pain, misery, death, and the
despise of what is human and for the earth." A powerful
gloss on the coyuntura, this.
On presenting Sicilia with the La Lucha Sigue award three
months ago, NACLA described his work and his presence in the
following way:
"Sicilia's activism and discourse have increasingly taken on
the character and language of nonviolent resistance. To
change the dynamic of the violence that has beset the
country, he argues, it is necessary to change the discourse
of violence. Such a change, he has written, must reflect the
belief system of militant nonviolence - the commitment to
face power with resistance and sacrifice, and the
willingness to publicly absorb oppression in order to end
it."
This is the guiding vision of the Caravan.
[Fred Rosen is a writer and reporter based in Mexico City.
He has been a regular correspondent and/or columnist for a
number of publications, including NACLA Report on the
Americas, El Financiero International, Mexican Labor News
and Analysis, and the Mexico edition of The Miami Herald.]
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